Locomotive to the Past by George Schultz (iphone ebook reader .TXT) š
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- Author: George Schultz
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Still mumbling to himself, he opened the doorāpossibly 18 inchesāa cautious move, to ascertain who it was, that was so, inconsiderately, ādisturbing his peaceā! It was a woman!
The woman unleashed a completely-unexpected, bone-jarring, kick! The door wasāimmediatelyāflung wide open! It crashedāagainst the sidewall, inside! The resulting soundāfrom the ear-splitting collisionāfilled the entire building!
The woman then extended her armāin the precise direction, of the renter of the slovenly apartment! At the end of that armāwas a hand! A steady hand! Extremely steady! At the end of that unwavering handāwas a gun! A .38 Police Special revolverāto be exact!
Before the intended victim could really fathom what was about to take placeāit took place! The gun discharged! Its bullet crashed into Mannyās foreheadāfelling him! Immediately!
The unwelcome visitor movedāslowly and deliberatelyāforward! A mere two feet, did she advance! To a point, where she was standingādirectly above her gasping, gurgling, panicked, āhostā!
Taking careful aimāand with great deliberationāshe matter-of-factly emptied the remaining chambers! Launching five, deadly, canāt-miss, missilesā
molten slugsāinto the fallen manās chest! Not rapid-fire! Just a steady. calculated, machine-like, staccato, outpouringāof lethal lead!
As the fourth bullet entered Mannyās upper bodyāpiercing the heart, of the already-dead manāthe elderly gentleman, whoād lived directly across the hall threw open his apartment door! The better to see what was going on! It, of course, was a rather reckless endeavor!
The pistol-wielding woman turned to face the ācuriousā neighbor!
āEasy, Lady,ā cautioned the manāas he backed, slowly, into his abode. āI donāt want no trouble! I didnāt see . . . didnāt see nothing! I opened the doorā¦ and all I saw was that son of a bitch! And he . . . he was just lyinā there! In a pool! A whole lot . . . of damn blood! I didnāt see . . . didnāt see nothinā else! Wasnāt no one! No one else! No one else . . . was there! Not out there! Not a damn soul! I swear! I didnāt see nothinā else!ā
āItās all right,ā she respondedāsoftly. Her voice seemed almost made of velvet! āGo ahead,ā she urged. āGo aheadā¦ and call nine-one-one! Please! Call nine-eleven! Iāll be rightā¦ right here! Iām not going to harm you! Iām not going to harm anyone! No one else . . . will I harm! Please, thoughā¦ go ahead! Go ahead . . . make the call!ā
When the policeāthree uniformed officers, and a plainclothesmanāarrived, the woman was sitting, on the floor, at the top of the stairs! Her feet rested upon the second step down! The still-warm .38 dangledāfreely, by the trigger guardāfrom her index finger!
Two of the cops had already drawn their side-armsāand the third was in the process of unholstering his firearm!
āYou donāt have to worry,ā assured the woman. āItās empty . . . for one thing! All the bullets . . . theyāre all inside Mister Foster! Youāll find himā¦ lying in his doorway! Iām not going to cause youā¦ any of youā¦ any trouble! Not any moreā¦ than I may have already caused you!ā
She handed her emptied weapon to the non-uniformed officer! Then, she extended her wristsāfor the anticipated application of cold steel handcuffs!
The trio of uniformed men scurried past the instantaneous prisonerāand approached the lifeless body, of the victim! The plainclothes detective had made no motionāto handcuff the eerily-calm, certainly-remorseless, woman!
āHeās dead, Lieutenant,ā announced one of the three. āDonāt even have to feel for a pulse! And I aināt gonna put my hand, on his chest! Not gonna feel for no damn heartbeat! All kinds of blood, there! All kinds! Heās dead! Deaderān hell!ā
āYou wanna tell me about it, Miss?ā asked the one, in street clothes. āYou knowā¦ know the whole bullshit! The āMiranda Warningā . . . and all that! Whatever you say . . . whatever you may be gonna tell meā¦ it can be used against you! Probably will! Hell, it definitely willā¦ Iām sure! There are three sterling witnesses . . . standing right here! So, you wanna say somethingā¦ here? Now? Or do you wanna waitā¦ till we get down to headquarters? And you can talk toā¦ can tell the prosecutors, all about it! Orā¦ you knowā¦ you can get yourself a lawyer! Thatād probably be your best bet! Doesnāt make a damn to me! Any way you wanna do it! Anywhere you wanna do it! I could care less!ā
āIt doesnāt matter to me,ā she replied, softly. āWho I talk toā¦ or where I might wind up, talking to them. It isnāt going to make much difference. May I knowā¦ to whom Iām speaking?ā
āIām Lieutenant Phipps. Lieutenant Phillip Phipps.ā
āWell,ā her soft monotone remained unchanged, āWhat happened wasā¦ Iād come here. Comeā¦ earlier tonight. On the half-promise of a jobā¦ at Mister Fosterās place of business. A coffee shopā¦ on Michigan Avenue, outside of Telegraph Road.ā
āHe gave you a promise?ā queried the detective. āA promise of gainful employment?ā
āWell, I thought it was. Iām a waitress, by trade. I workedā¦ for the better part of eleven yearsā¦ at Shoremanās Cafe. Over on Warren Avenue. Worked thereā¦ till Mister Shoreman passed away. About two-and-a-halfā¦ or threeā¦ months ago! Mrs. Shoremanā¦ she tried, but she simply couldnāt run the place. We all tried to help. But, you knowā¦ she just wasnāt able, to make the place run. I donāt know of anyone who couldāveā¦ outside of Mister Shoreman.ā
āThatās right, Lieutenant. The missus and Iā¦ we used to eat there. All the time. Just about every Sunday! In fact, I know this ladyā¦ a little bit. Joint closed downā¦ a week or two ago.ā
āI know,ā snarled Phipps. āIāve heard of the place too.ā Turning back to the ladyāstill seated on the floorāhe urged, āGo on, Miss.ā
āWell, my name is Ella. Ella Mahoney. Iām thirty-eight-years-old. Divorced. Live on Normile Street. Down near Warren and Wyoming. Have two children. My daughter is elevenā¦ and the sweetest little girl, youād ever want to meet. But, my son!ā For the first time, she was showing some emotion. āMy little boy! Heās got problems! A lot of problems! For one thing, heās autistic! And his father . . . my sainted ex-husband, who is one of your glorious prosecutors, one of Dearbornās top
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